Search Results for 'architecture'

One factor of the current poll is “Gardening and landscaping”, which is defined as maintenance of public green areas. It also means creating and building new public green areas and there is an interesting project to find in New York City: A defunct stretch of railroad on the Far West Side of Manhattan is destined to become a park in the sky.

The High Line is an abandoned 2.33 km (1.45 mile) section of the former elevated freight railroad of the West Side Line, along the lower west side of New York City borough of Manhattan between located in the West Village. The High Line was built in the early 1930s by the New York Central and has been unused by freight service since 1980. It is in a state of disrepair, although the elevated structure is basically sound. Wild grass and plants grow along most of the route.

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Today it is popular to create city ranking corning very different aspects. We appreciate the interest into this topic very much. Now, Monocle magazine will publish the 2008 edition of the 20 Most Livable Cities index in their July/August issue. Monocle’s unique ranking goes beyond the usual metrics that only look at housing costs and schools to include the possibility of getting a good glass of wine at one in the morning, the quality of new architecture, the ease of setting up a business and even the number of cinema screens. They write “Months of good-natured, frequently late-night and jetlagged debate have produced Monocle’s definitive (and just a little subjective) guide to the world’s most liveable cities. Correspondents were dispatched worldwide to assess the cities. The entire issue is devoted to the concerns, forces, people and policies that make our cities work.”

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While doing some research for our different factors in the current poll on “Economic Environment”, we found an interesting study on tourism. “City Tourism & Culture: The European Experience” is a report commissioned jointly by the World Tourism Organization (WTO) and European Travel Commission (ETC) and provides insights into the expansion of European cities as cultural tourism destinations.

The study provides a conceptual framework for the analysis of city tourism with a cultural motivation and aims to contribute to the marketing and product development of city tourism by throwing more light on the evolution of cultural tourism in Europe from ‘traditional’ to ‘innovative’. Based on the concepts of ’heritage’, ‘cultural’ and ‘creative’ cities, the study clusters destinations according to their predominant cultural product, and analyses the recent performance and positioning of each cluster - as well as their opportunities for future growth.

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We found out that one of our blogroll partner A Vision of Europe has a new interesting campaign: The European prize 2008 for the best urban neighborhood in Europe. This prize is launched in occasion of the 25th anniversary of the European Prize for the Reconstruction of the City, the Philippe Rotthier Foundation for the Architecture in Bruxelles, together with A Vision of Europe and CivicArch Lab at the University of Ferrara.

The European Prize promotes the characters of excellence in the designing and building of new urban neighborhoods and aims at enhancing the European genius of building the fundamental matrix of the traditional city: the mixed-use urban neighborhood. It also aims at encouraging the creation of new mixed-use urban neighborhoods conceived and designed according to the principles of Sustainable Development and the EU Green Paper for the Urban Environment.

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Finally the second part of the issue of the PerfectCity Charter "The City of The Future" is now online. It includes the results and the interpretation of these results of the latest poll, which was to find out the most important factors of city architecture. It also provides an overview on the discussions on city architecture.

The overall goal is the development of the PerfectCity Charter, which is being developed stepwise in and through discussion and represented by the corresponding dossiers of each issue. The next dossier is environmental conditions and sustainability.

Please leave your comments, annotations and your suggestion here under this post or at the end of the dossier in the sidebar..

We have closed our poll on city architecture and we would like thank everyone who has voted for the factors in our poll. Now we would like to present the summarized results to you:

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Which infrastructural improvements do you anticipate for the districts, in which such arenas are going to be built?

The main infrastructural improvements concern transport: public transportation infrastructure and road network/parking. Arenas are able (and are made) to host big events, like concerts or sport’s games. Therefore, it is crucial to guarantee the access, both by public and private transport, to that place of the city, in those specific periods.

This poses a challenge for transport and urban planning. Public transport is made to serve large numbers of people, on a regular basis. Events, on the other hand, create a very high demand in a very short period of time and in specific days, often in offpeak hours. How to conceptualize a public transport system that is suited for that?

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Regarding our PerfectCity Charter the current topic on City Architecture is coming to an end. You’ve still got a few days left to vote. If you think that there are more important factors of City Architecture than currently reflected in our poll, please do not hesitate to express your opinions through voting. After ending the topic you will find the results in the PerfectCity Charter.

The next issue coming up will concentrate on Environmental Conditions and Sustainability.

We are looking forward to presenting the factors of the new poll to you, accompanied by a few interesting posts on this topic.

In March 2008, Phaidon Press will publish an authoritative and richly illustrated survey of the modern city.

The Endless City has been produced in collaboration with The Urban Age Project at the London School of Economics, and brings together extensive research and analysis from experts in sociology, engineering, architecture and urban policy.

Taking six major world cities as a focal point – New York, Shanghai, London, Mexico City, Johannesburg and Berlin – this book provides an unprecedented insight into both the built environment of these cities and the economic, social and political policies that shape them. With texts written by international experts supported by newly commissioned photographs, maps and diagrams, The Endless City is essential reading for anyone interested in the future of our cities.

Check out the sneak preview here.

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